While it might not be groundbreaking to play a kid's favorite music to wake him up, this three-year-old's brother and sister get an adorable reaction when they rouse the toddler to Nirvana's "Breed."

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The young rocker starts drumming before his eyes are even open.

"The last time we woke him up in the car, he got so grumpy and cranky. And since he loves this kind of music we just had to try a new method," writes the boy's older brother in the description for this YouTube video, which had more than 165,000 views as of press time.

Some commenters expressed concern that the three-year-old was wearing a safety belt without a child car seat, fearing serious injury in the event of an accident. Others were simply elated by his drumming.

An old drum beats a path from the ancients to Erykah Badu by Susan Njanji Female talking drummer Aralola Olamuyiwa popularly known as Ara plays drum and sings along with children after givem tutorials in a private school in Lagos on November 10, 2011. The West African talking drum, a glass-shaped instrument usually made of wood and animal hide, had in the past served as a means of communication between villages long before the existence of phones, not to mention email and text messages. The talking drum is imbued with a complex set of sounds roughly mimicking the words of local languages. From the way the drum is beaten, those familiar with it can tell if it is announcing a birth, death, marriage, declaration of war or arrival of the king. AFP PHOTO/PIUS UTOMI EKPEI (Photo credit should read PIUS UTOMI EKPEI/AFP/GettyImages)